Junechanint

ZSVS, June 2006: Interviews

ZSVS Participant Interview with…

Chantal Santerre

(1) Where were you born, where do you now live, what has been your main schooling, employment, family life, etc.? In short, introduce yourself personally.

My name is Chantal Santerre and I was born in Montreal, Québec in Canada. I am the fourth girls of a working class family. I’m a chartered accountant, which is the equivalent of a CPA in USA. I’m an administration teacher at College level. I have two daughters named Marie et Camille. They are 14 and 11 years old.

 

(2) What have been your main political involvement in the past? Are you involved with particular movements, projects, or organizations now? If so, which? What features would an International Political Organization have to embody to attract you? What features would repel you? In short, introduce yourself politically.

I published with others a study that proposed other ways of taxation to promote equity and to increase government income. I’m also an accountant for different popular groups.

I organize local and international projects (in South America) with my students to develop their social implication.

(3) Imagine you are giving a public talk The question and answer period arrives. Someone says, "I know you are against capitalism, anti-racist, and anti-sexist. I know you believe in participation, want solidarity, require sustainability, and seek justice. Me too. But in a real world society, what institutions do you seek so as to fulfill those aims? What are your structural goals?" How do you answer? In short, explore a bit in the directions ZSVS seeks to emphasize.

I seek institution that will promote mutual aid. I think that we should have institution, like those proposed in Participatory Economics that would permit to accomplish in conformity with dearly held values the basic of what an economy has to do. And that will give more liberty to everybody to take care of the others spheres of the life.

 

(4) What do you hope to get out of ZSVS, personally, for your self and for your work? For us all, what do you think will most likely come out of ZSVS? Also, what do you hope, in your most optimistic moment, will come out of it? In short, affect what we all plan and undertake and the tone we do it with.

I will like that we find ways for promoting participatory economics. If we want to change things we must prepare the people. We have to start by educating the people, let them know what is participatory economics is, that is viable and that it reflects what they are for. But to do that we have to find ways to include the people to get their interest and this is what is the more difficult. All the people that are already engage in different popular group will be the easiest part. It is the others, those who a lot of the leftist fail to engage them, because they ask them to change all their lifestyle, it is those who I think if we can teach them what is participatory economics, we will make a big gain. I would like that we find actions that we can do to accomplish this.


manao

ʻO nā pahuhopu o ZSVS e:

  • To explore ideas about long
    term vision and related long and short term strategy and program, to reach
    agreements and clarify persisting differences

  • To facilitate people laying a basis for working together
  • To facilitate people
    establishing joint projects

  • To generate enough agreement to initiate some
    joint or collective work

  • To generate enough agreement to initiate continuing and/or
    enlarging group connections

  • Additionally, Z will video,
    record, and otherwise keep transcripts. Some material will  appear
    in Z, on ZNet, and/or in book form – with permissions, of course.

'O nā po'e komo

 

inoa
aina
Leka uila
ninaninau
hōʻike
Click for person’s page
Origin/home
Click to email person
Kaomi no ka heluhelu
Kaomi no ka heluhelu – will become links as the
articles arrive…
Yugoslavia 

[pale ʻia ka leka uila] 

Andrea Schmidt
Kanaka
 
US
Chantel Santerre
Kanaka 
US
US
Evan Henshaw Plath
US
 
Argentina 
Felipe Pérez Martí
Venezuela
Venezuela
Harsha Walia
ʻInia
The Apartheid of Migration
Irina Ceric
Serbia/Canada
 
Jamie LeJeune
U.S./Thailand
 
US
US
Jonah Gindin
Kanaka
 
Kanaka 
Kendra Fehrer
US
 
US
Argentina 
Marina Sitrin
US
Mark
Evans
UK
 
US
aupuni Beritania 
Kanaka 
US
ʻO ka hoʻonaʻauao honua
Ria Julien
Trinidad/US
 
Palani 
Sean Gonsalves
US
 
US
Rawa and Feminist Strategy
US
Palani 
Tamara Vukov
   
Thomas Ponniah
US
 
US


A number of people at one time or another during the preparations for ZSVS 2006 indicated
a desire to attend, but were later unable to do so. These included:

America Vera Zavala – Sweden Anthony Arnove – U.S. Barbara Ehrenreich – U.S. Betsy Hartman – U.S. Bill Fletcher – U.S.
Boris Kagarlitsky – Russia Bridgit Anderson – Great Britain Carol Delgado – Venezuela Carola Reintjes- Spain Charlotte Ryan – U.S.
Christophe Aguiton – Italy Daniel Chavez – Neth Dennis Brutus Devinder Sharma – India Elaine Bernard – ʻAmelika Hui Pū ʻIa
Hector Mondragon – Colombia Hilary Wainwright – Great Britain Ilan Pappe - Iseraela John Hepburn – Australia John Pilger – Great Britain
Katha Pollitt – U.S. Laura Flanders – U.S. Leslie Cagan – U.S. Mandisi Majavu – ʻApelika Hema Manuel Rozental – Colombia
Manning Marable – U.S. Pablo Ortellado – Brazil Pervez Hoodhboy – Pakistan Peter Bohmer – U.S. Robert Jensen – U.S.
Robin Kelley – U.S. Ron Daniels – U.S. Sudhanva Deshpande – India Tanya Reinhart – Israel Tim Wise – U.S.
Trevor Ngwane – South Africa ʻO Vandana Shiva - Inia Vijay Prashad – U.S.

A number of other folks either said no to coming, or didn’t respond at all

Tariq Ali – Great Britain Arundhati Roy – India Sheila Rowbotham – Great Britain Naomi Klein – Can Amy Goodman – U.S.
Juliet Shor – U.S. Luca Cassarini – Italy Howard Zinn – U.S. Walden Bello (Phil) Virginia Setshedi (SoAfr)
Vittorio Agnoletto – Italy Adele Oliveri – Italy Atilo Boron – Arg

ninaninau 'ana

Click the following names for their ZSVS introductory interview…
Each participant has been sent the same series of questions to answer.
When the answers arrive they are linked here.

Ezekiel Adamovsky ʻO Michael Albert ʻO Jessica Azulay Normand Baillargeon Jeremy Brecher
Denis Brutus Irina Ceric ʻO Brian Dominick Mark Evans Kendra Fehrer
ʻO Susan George Jonah Gindin Sean Gonzalves Andrej Grubacic Ria Julien
Sonali Kolhatkar Jamie LeJeune Rahul Mahajan Mandisi Majavu ʻO Felipe
Pérez Martí
Hector Mondragon Cynthia Peters Evan Henshaw Plath Justin
Podur
Thomas Ponniah
Milan Rai Manuel Rozental Chantal Santerre Lydia Sargent Andrea Schmidt
Stephen Salom Devinder Sharma Chris Spannos Marina Sitrin Marie Trigona
Amerika
Vera Zavala
Tamara Vukov Harsha Walia ʻO Tom Wetzel ʻO Greg Wilpert

 

Submitted Interviews But Could Not Attend….

Bridget
Anderson
Sudhanva Deshpande  Francesca Fiorentini John Hepburn Pervez Hoodbhoy
ʻO Robert Jensen Mandisi
Majavu
Chhandasi Pandya Ilan Pappe ʻO Vijay Prashad
Carola Reintjes Max
Uhlenbeck

 

papahana

ZSVS Agenda
This agenda is in process of formation
in light of proposed papers, some guesses, etc.
Things will change, somewhat…no
kanalua.



haʻalele 'ana
Please see immediately below the timetable for information
on the format of presentations and questions…

June 1 / Thursday

Anytime All Day
Arrive Logan Airport in Boston, take hour and a
half Bonanza bus ride, arrive Woods Hole. Also possible, arrive Providence, Rhode
Island, but Bonanza bus trip to Woods Hole is longer and somewhat more compilcated.
Check-in at Motel, etc.

Dinner and Socializing at Swope Hall: 6:00 – 7:30 PM

Official Welcome, Introductions, and Orientation 8:30 – 10:00 PM

 

June 2 / Friday – Economic/Social Vision and Strategy

Breakfast and Socializing at Swope Hall: 7:00 – 8:30 AM

Morning Session: 9:00 – 10:30 AM
-
Trigona:
Self-Management in Argentina

Questions: Spannos, Baillargeon

Small Group Discussions: 10:45 – 11:45 AM

Lunch and Socializing at Swope Hall: 12:00 – 1:15 PM

Afternoon Session One: 1:30 – 3:00 PM
- Wilpert:
Hoʻopili ʻana i nā ʻano ʻē aʻe post-capitalist

Questions: Julien, Gindin

Afternoon Session Two: 3:30 – 5:00 PM
-Wetzel:
Workers’ Liberation

Questions: Peters, Ceric

Small Group Discussions 5:10 – 6:00 PM

Dinner and Socializing at Swope Hall: 6:15 – 7:15 PM

Evening Session: 8:00 – 9:30 PM
- Albert:
Building A Pareconish Movement

Questions: Pérez-Martí, George

Whole Group Sum Up, Socializing, Filmed Interviews: 9:30 - 11:00 PM

 

June 3 / Saturday – Political Vision
a me ka Papahana

Breakfast and Socializing at Swope: 7:00 – 8:30 AM

Morning Session: 9:00 – 10:30 AM
- Grubacic:
Ka Mana a me ke Kipi

Questions: Baillargeon, Julien

Small Group Discussions: 10:45 – 11:45 AM

Lunch and Socializing at Swope: 12:00 – 1:15 PM

Afternoon Session One: 1:30 – 3:00 PM
- Martí:
Free Information, Free Software & Revolution

Questions: Plath, Azulay

Afternoon Session Two: 3:30 – 5:00 PM
- Adamovsky: Autonomous Politics
Questions: Dominick, Wetzel

Small Group Discussions 5:10 – 6:00 PM

Dinner and Socializing at Swope Hall: 6:15 – 7:15 PM

Evening Session: 8:00 – 9:30 PM
- Shalom:
Visionary Politics

Questions: Schmidt, Albert

Whole Group Sum Up, Socializing, Filmed Interviews 9:30 – 11:00 PM…

June 4 / Sunday – Gender Vision and Strategy

Breakfast and Socializing at Z House: 7:00 – 8:30 AM

Morning Session: 9:00 -10:30 AM
-
Peters: Kinship Vision
Questions: Sitrin, Fehrer

Small Group Discussions: 10:45 – 11:45 AM

Lunch and Socializing at Z House: 12:00 – 1:15 PM

Afternoon Session One: 1:30 – 3:00 PM

— Kolhatkar: RAWA and Feminist Strategy
ninaninau 'ana i:
Evans, George

Afternoon Session Two: 3:30 – 5:00 PM
kahi
Are We Going With These Sessions – Discussing Outcomes, etc.

Free Time 5:10 – 6:00 PM

Dinner and Socializing at Z: 6:15 – 7:15 PM

Party at Z 8:00 – 10:30 PM…

June 5 / Monday – Race and Community Vision and Strategy

Breakfast and Socializing at Swope Hall: 7:00 – 8:30 AM

Morning Session: 9:00 – 10:30 AM
-
Podur:
Race, Culture, & Leftists

Questions: Gonsalves, Ponniah

Small Group Discussions: 10:45 – 11:45 AM

Lunch and Socializing at Swope Hall: 12:00 – 1:15 PM

Afternoon Session Two: 1:30 – 3:00 PM
-
Walia: The Apartheid of Migration
Questions: Shalom, Plath

Afternoon Session One: 3:30 – 5:00 PM
Where Are We Going With These Sessions – Discussing Outcomes, etc.

Small Group Discussions 5:15 – 6:15 PM

Dinner and Socializing at Swope Hall: 6:30 – 7:30 PM

Evening: Where Are We Going With These Sessions – Discussing Outcomes, etc.
/ Socializing – 8:00 –
11:00 PM…

June 6 / Tuesday – International Relations
ʻIke a me ka hoʻolālā

Breakfast and Socializing at Swope Hall: 7:00 – 8:30 AM

Morning Session: 9:00 – 10:30 AM
- Ray:
World Upside Down

Questions: Spannos, Gindin

Small Group Discussions: 10:45 – 11:45 AM

Lunch and Socializing at Swope Hall: 12:00 – 1:15

Afternoon Session One: 1:30 – 3:00 PM
- Brecher:
Global People’s Law?

Questions: Halimi, Sitrin

Afternoon Session Two: 3:30 – 5:00 PM
— Mahajan: Internationalism…
Questions: Vukov, Podur

Small Group Discussions 5:10 – 6:00 PM

Dinner and Socializing at Swope Hall: 6:15 – 7:15 PM

Lasting Outcomes of ZSVS: 8:00 – 11:00

June 7 / Wednesday

Checkout: Roughly 10:00 AM
Flights out from Logan Airport (or, via more difficult bus connections from Providence)
all day as arranged.

Proposed Format
(Please send requests for either general changes,
or changes in your own sessions.)

Presentation Sessions

  • Presentations will be chaired by the presenter.
  • All papers will be available online to participants a month in advance.
  • Presentations will summarize papers for at most thirty minutes.
  • Presentations will offer claims about vision and or strategy, or about tasks
    regarding vision and or strategy.
  • Named questioners will ask questions they and perhaps others have about how
    to understand or expand on the presenter’s points seeking to provoke discussion and
    ʻimi ʻimi.
  • Named questioners will be limited to four minutes each.
  • Anyone who wants to present more in-depth comments in advance, for posting,
    or debate, etc., should do so.
  • After initial questions are asked, the presenter will answer for at most twenty
    minutes, and then take further questions and comments from all attending.
  • Toward the close of the session the presenter will get a sense of the room regarding
    his or her claims – do people agree with them, disagree with them, or are they unclear
    about them – to provide grist for small group explorations.

Small Group Discussions

  • Each day everyone will randomly get a colored slip before sessions – red, yellow,
    blue, green – and there will be four groups based on all members having the same
    color slip.
  • Morning and afternoon small group discussions will be in these groups to facilitate
    that everyone spends time with everyone else and that there are small sessions for
    sharing ideas, etc.
  • We considered a proposal that people have meals with their small groups, but
    decided we might get burned in oil for micro-managing.

Nā Pepa

Adamovsky: Autonomous Politics Albert: Building A Pareconish Movement
Brecher: Global People’s Law? Grubacic: Power and Revolution
Martí: Free Information, Free Software & Revolution Peters: Kinship Vision
Podur: Race, Culture, & Leftists Rai: World Upside Down
ʻO Shalom: ʻO ka Politics Visionary Spannos: World Without War
Trigona: Self-Management in Argentina Wetzel: Workers’ Liberation
Wilpert: Linking Post-Capitalist Alternatives

Housing, Food, etc.

The Nautilous Motel

Harsha Walia / Ria Julien Andrea Schmidt / Cynthia Peters ʻO Susan George
Marie Trigona / Sonali Kolhatkar Tamara Vukov / Irina Ceric Andrej Grubacic / Marina Sitrin
Justin Podur / Greg Wilpert Jessica Azulay / Brian Dominick  Kendra Fehrer / Thomas Ponniah
Normand Baillargeon / Chantel Santerre Milan Rai / Mark Evans Steve Shalom / Jonah Gindin
Ezequiel Adamovsky / Rahul Mahajan  Felipe Pérez Martí / Chris Spannos Jeremy Brecher / Serge Halimi
Evan Henshaw Plath Jamie LeJeune / Tom Wetzel
Lydia Sargent and Michael Albert (Z House)
Sean Gonsalves and Andy Dunn (commute)

ai

Z pre-paid meals will be at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute’s Swope Hall.
Swope is a large University type dining hall, for marine biology students and faculty
– world famous and teeming with international students and scientist/professors.

The meals are all you can eat, with diverse selections.
It isn’t gourmet, but it is quite good, and they have ample vegetarian selections
and even make a credible stab at Vegan offerings.

It is also possible to eat at any of numerous local restaurants for breakfast,
lunch, or dinner,for those who want to escape the larger venue at some point, though
this is on your own tab.

Sunday meals will be catered at the Z House, as Swope Hall is closed. Excellent
meaʻai.

 

Weather

Early June in Wood Holes is volatle. It will be mostly long pants and reasonably
warm clothing, especially for the evening or if there is a cold rainy day – but also
bring summer weight shorts and, if you would like to swim at a nearby beach, a swimming
hoopii.

There are times when people, especially from hot climates, will want sweaters,
etc. Other times, most everyone would have short sleeves. In short, come diversely
prepared, depending on your needs. An umbrella is likely to prove useful once or
twice. Our real summar weather starts a couple to three weeks later…which is why
we get good prices on motel rooms, etc., in early June.

Temperatures can range from 50F to 80F but are likely to be in the 58F to 68F
range, most often, unless we get an early warm spell.

 

 

Tactics, Strategy, Etc. …

Ka Hoʻolālā Pāʻani
Nā ʻatikala like ʻole e hōʻino ana i ka manaʻo kipi, me kekahi mau hoʻopaʻapaʻa.

kuʻikahi?
Hoʻopaʻapaʻa mua ʻo Albert lāua ʻo ZNeter Brian Dominick i ka pono o ka hoʻoholo ʻana i ka ʻaelike.

“Feminism”
ʻO Lydia Sargent nā moʻolelo satire e hoʻopiʻi ana i nā wahine huikau.

Pollitt/Media
ʻO Albert lāua ʻo Katha Pollit hoʻopaʻapaʻa media, ka Lahui, etc.

 

kakau

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kakau

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